NotMyProblemAnymoreCunt
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Get a chance to check out Stormlight Archive yet? If so, what did you think?
I'm a huge Stormlight Archive fan
Has my favorite world in the Cosmere
Get a chance to check out Stormlight Archive yet? If so, what did you think?
Not yet. I just finished Between Two Fires. I'll be starting it next. I'll try and give some first impressions soon.Get a chance to check out Stormlight Archive yet? If so, what did you think?
Not yet. I just finished Between Two Fires. I'll be starting it next. I'll try and give some first impressions soon.
I really dug between two fires. It not only reminded me of Berserk but Devilman in a few ways. The basic gist of the story is that its set during the black plague and the people feel like God has abandoned them. It turns out he has! Because of that demons have been able to walk amongst mankind. Where is God? Why has he abandoned his people? I'll say no more than that. It's also a pretty simple read. A small cast of well-fleshed-out characters.
EDIT: I should add that the main thrust of the plot of between two fires isn't clear until about a quarter of the way through the book. The author really sets the stage with his world-building of how shitty everything is. People are starving. Corpses line the streets. Rampant crime. Our main female character is nearly gang-raped at the beginning. Very dark and brutal stuff. Give it a read IDKFA
Same here pretty much. Can't work while I'm listening. I can while driving if it's on an empty country road or something either, but definitely not in a busy area.What is your main activity while listening to Audiobooks? Driving, etc? I can’t absorb them effectively if I’m busy doing something else
That sounds right up my alley. I am going to check this out.The Mountain in the Sea , Ray Nayler. Sci-fi. In the near future, hyper intelligent cephalopods are discovered throughout an archipelago. They are advanced enough to have developed their own language and culture. The story follows a scientist hired by a big corpo to study the octopuses, along with a few others in tow - including the world's first android. Various entities then begin competing over how to best exploit them and their advances.
Not only is it very well written and fascinating, but it's actually as much of a meditation on the nature of consciousness as it is typical sci-fi fare.
4/5. Near greatness for a literary debut.
Have begun the Gaunt's Ghost series from games workshop. I'm on Book 3 and its INSANELY good. Book 1 is "First and Only".
I am an absolute 40k Lore Whore and even I can't tell you where to start. I would google "Warhammer reading order" if you want an outside opinion on the starting point.I'm thinking of getting into the books. Is The Horus Heresy a good starting point? I never got into any of the Warhammer stuff. I always wanted to though
I am an absolute 40k Lore Whore and even I can't tell you where to start. I would google "Warhammer reading order" if you want an outside opinion on the starting point.
If it was me I would direct you to a few different YouTube channels as a starting point to get you acclimated before you start spending money. But that is just me.
Just looked it up
I was just told to jump in whatever storyline interest me the most
I guess I'm gonna to start with The Horus Heresy than
Thanks for the info!
Good luck! Just be wary of Wiki dives. You could spoil some bombshells.Just looked it up
I was just told to jump in whatever storyline interest me the most
I guess I'm gonna to start with The Horus Heresy than
Thanks for the info!
Good luck! Just be wary of Wiki dives. You could spoil some bombshells.
Its worth the wait otherwise!
You are in for what is in my opinion one of the best trips of lore in sci-fi fantasy.Yeah I'm aware
I just looked up where to start with Warhammer and Warhammer reading order. The setting always interested me. Always seemed like a darker more adult version of Star Wars
Recently finished Brothers: Karamazov by Dostoevsky. For those that don’t know - It’s a 800 page behemoth and considered to be the best novel of all time by many literary critics and intellectuals.
It was a good book. Amazing in parts but VERY LONG WINDED. Not what if call a “fun read”. Holy shit. Also it had a very unsatisfying ending. I’m glad I read it - I learned a lot about Russian life in the 1800’s and how Christianity impacted the culture, and how deeply spirituality was embedded into Russian life.
There’s parts of the book that are transcendent in their beauty and their existential brilliance. I just wish it didn’t take 800 uneven pages to get there.
Anyone else read it?
I haven’t read The Devils, although at some point I might. From Dostoevsky I’ve read Crime And Punishment, Notes from Underground, and Brothers. I’d say out of all of them I liked Crime And Punishment the most. Strange thing though, for someone who’s so heralded in literature, none of his books are “enjoyable” to consume. They’re incredibly dark and complex and have great characters, but I think of his Dostoevsky like medicine - I’m consuming his work because I know it’ll be good for me, but there’s nothing enjoyable about the process.I agree. I will say though that the book gains with memory, and something just clicks.
A friend of mine loved all 300 pages of the trial scene.
Have you read The Devils? Great ending.
Strange, I really enjoyed most of Dostoyevsky. BK and The Idiot were work though, as was the first part of the Devils. The end is pure fire though.I haven’t read The Devils, although at some point I might. From Dostoevsky I’ve read Crime And Punishment, Notes from Underground, and Brothers. I’d say out of all of them I liked Crime And Punishment the most. Strange thing though, for someone who’s so heralded in literature, none of his books are “enjoyable” to consume. They’re incredibly dark and complex and have great characters, but I think of his Dostoevsky like medicine - I’m consuming his work because I know it’ll be good for me, but there’s nothing enjoyable about the process.
The islanders have only three rules: don’t stick your nose where it’s not wanted, don’t mention the war, and never let your guard down during October.
Leigh Welles has not set foot on the island in years, but when she finds herself called home from a disappointing life on the Scottish mainland by her father’s unexpected death, she is determined to forget the sorrows of the past—her mother’s abandonment, her brother’s icy distance, the unspeakable tragedy of World War II—and start fresh. Fellow islander Iain MacTavish, a RAF veteran with his eyes on the sky and his head in the past is also in desperate need of a new beginning. A young widower, Iain struggles to return to the normal life he knew before the war.
But this October is anything but normal. This October, the sluagh are restless. The ominous, bird-like creatures of Celtic legend—whispered to carry the souls of the dead—have haunted the islanders for decades, but in the war’s wake, there are more wandering souls and more slaugh. When a local boy disappears, Leigh and Iain are thrown together to investigate the truth at the island’s dark heart and reveal hidden secrets of their own.
Rich with historical detail and a skillful speculative edge, Emma Seckel’s propulsive and pulse-pounding debut The Wild Hunt unwinds long-held tales of love, loss, and redemption.
This book had a great premise, but horrible execution. This book was boring, poorly written, and worst of all, preachy. It takes forever to get started and then becomes chapter after chapter of juvenile musings on life and consciousness.The Mountain in the Sea , Ray Nayler. Sci-fi. In the near future, hyper intelligent cephalopods are discovered throughout an archipelago. They are advanced enough to have developed their own language and culture. The story follows a scientist hired by a big corpo to study the octopuses, along with a few others in tow - including the world's first android. Various entities then begin competing over how to best exploit them and their advances.
This book had a great premise, but horrible execution. This book was boring, poorly written, and worst of all, preachy. It takes forever to get started and then becomes chapter after chapter of juvenile musings on life and consciousness.
Currently reading The Wild Hunt by Emma Seckel (2022)
The synopsis sounded interesting
Still early on but it's really good so far. Seckel can paint a picture using few words. I opted for the Audible integration since after a sale they were only about $9 together, and the voice acting on the audiobook is terrific. I am learning how to pronounce so many Scottish words I've been sounding out in my head incorrectly for years.
Hey, book readers. Got any recommendations for me? I'd like to read the wisdom of some historical deep-thinkers but not sure where to start. Something that's got life advice that's applicable no matter the century. Stuff that's actually applicable to real life (i.e., miss me with Hegelian dialectics or whatever).
I've never read Marcus Aurelius or Teddy Roosevelt's stuff--would those fit? What should I start with?
Hey, book readers. Got any recommendations for me? I'd like to read the wisdom of some historical deep-thinkers but not sure where to start. Something that's got life advice that's applicable no matter the century. Stuff that's actually applicable to real life (i.e., miss me with Hegelian dialectics or whatever).
I've never read Marcus Aurelius or Teddy Roosevelt's stuff--would those fit? What should I start with?